After 18 months’ worth of failed attempts by the administration to repair the depressed housing market with
tax credits, loan modification programs, government-backed loans, low interest rates and lender refi subsidies,
many analysts are proposing a more shocking course of action for the market — let it crash.
The rationale for letting the housing market crash is lower housing prices will immediately come about and
that will lure buyers into the market and quickly create the stability the government has tried and failed to
produce. The hesitancy by many stems from protection of the rising number of homeowners who will be driven into
negative equity conditions and insolvency due to any further drop in their homes’ value.
Those who oppose the “let it crash” idea argue the housing market is now left with only a few segments to be
priced down, and another drop would more likely generate a new crisis than just fresh buyers. While the
administration would love to take credit for low interest rates as the sole most effective present solution,
the Federal Reserve (the Fed) does not take direction from the executive branch, and it is the Fed that
controls rates.
More moderate economists are urging the government to address homeowner negative equity, which they feel is
one of the major factors at the root of the Great Recession. Millions of underwater homeowners won’t
find relief from low prices if they are locked into homes that can’t be sold or have no equity, crash or no
crash.
Clarion's take:: Lenders now neglect to provide funding for buy-to-let investors who would
take on the excess housing. Long term financing is simply not being made available to this group of willing
buyers who have the capacity to stimulate sales.
If prices are allowed to crash, speculators will swarm in with cash and buy homes priced far enough “back of
the market” to make a profit on the eventual resale to a user to justify the risk of providing liquidity for
the lender’s real estate owned (REO) properties. Buyer occupants will not benefit from these cash prices
as they are unable to compete. A crash will do nothing to keep owners in their homes.
The rate of short sales is increasing — a sign that upside-down houses are beginning to be cleared out of
the market. In regions like Orange County, 58% of all pending sales are short sales and only 8% are REO
resales. However, lenders are careful not to engage in too many short sales for fear of incentivizing
homeowners to default (as required by the lenders) in hopes of ridding themselves of the debt. If short sales
are to be the source of relief for the California housing market, lenders have to begin processing them more
efficiently.
Interest rates may be low, but only “nominally” so. The current rate of inflation is 0.6% with the note rate
around 4%, a real rate of return of 3.5% to the lender. Their cost of funds from the Fed is
lower than inflation. Historically, lenders want a 2.5%-3% spread — the real rate — between the rate of
inflation and the note rate. This means they are currently earning excessive profits at the expense of
homeowners in these decelerating inflationary times. Until lenders are forced to foreclose or otherwise report
their portfolio losses (by mark-to-market accounting), they lack financial incentive to change their
habits.
For buyer occupants to return to the market in full force, the solution boils down to jobs.
The government, as employer of last resort, must begin to focus on creating jobs. They have not, but are
indirectly getting the message as unemployed and underemployed populations make a lot more noise.
Employed homeowners can purchase homes and retain homeownership. The sale of more homes to employees in
newly created jobs will soon eliminate the delinquency problem and increase consumer confidence in one fell
swoop, as home prices will quickly stabilize and begin the rise.
Until more homeowners find employment and lenders clear their portfolios of overvalued mortgages and declare
their losses, brokers and agents can encourage consumer confidence through a more enlightened discussion.